Business
Bank governor warns of risks of cutting regulation in bid for growth

The governor of the Bank of England has cautioned over the risks of removing financial regulation in a bid to drive to growth, amid efforts by the Chancellor to scrap red tape.
Andrew Bailey said in a speech in Amsterdam that he can see evidence there is a “risk of history showing signs of repeating itself” amid calls for deregulation as memories fade regarding the financial crisis.
He stressed there is “no trade-off” between financial stability and ambitions for stronger growth and competitiveness.
“If the baby is thrown out with the bath water so to speak, and financial stability is relegated in terms of its importance, we won’t achieve our objectives,” he said.
The message, at an event hosted by the Dutch central bank, comes as Chancellor Rachel Reeves continues to push forward with plans to scale back regulation.
In July, Ms Reeves launched the “Leeds Reforms” package of changes to the financial services industry to pull back restrictions and encourage more financial risk-taking in a hope it could drive economic growth.
A week later, Mr Bailey warned against tearing up post-financial crisis ring-fencing rules on banks, stressing a need to protect consumers.
Shortly afterwards, he also reportedly blocked a meeting planned by Ms Reeves to address the regulation of Revolut, due to concerns of political interference in the central bank’s oversight process.
On Friday, Mr Bailey highlighted a theory by economist Hyman Minsky that “as time passes, memories of a financial crisis fade and this leads to a questioning of the continuing need for the responses”.
He added: “This creates the risk of history showing signs of repeating itself, remembering back for instance to the strength of the deregulation argument before the financial crisis.”
The governor also told the audience he “pushes back” against arguments that post-crisis regulation caused the fall in productivity growth and weaker investment in the years since.
Business
Why vinyl records like Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ are protected from tariffs

Taylor Swift performs onstage during The Eras Tour at Wembley Stadium on June 21, 2024, in London.
Kevin Mazur | Getty Images
On Friday, 24-year-old Tayra McDaniels will scamper down the stairs of her East Village apartment building and pick up four preordered vinyl editions of Taylor Swift’s new album, “The Life of a Showgirl” — each a different color and with a different collectible cover. Then she’ll head over to Target to snag three more exclusive CDs and another vinyl, she said.
The haul will cost her more than $200. “I know it’s a lot of money,” she said. “But I don’t want to miss out.”
One point of reprieve in the price: McDaniels and other vinyl fans won’t have to worry about tariffs on their hauls.
Vinyl records, CDs and cassettes were spared from the Trump administration’s late-August rollback of the “de minimis” exemption. The exemption, which had allowed packages valued at less than $800 to be imported without tariffs, was designed to simplify customs for low-cost imports and reduce fees for both consumers and small retailers. Trump’s rollback of the exemption allowed tariffs to take effect on such shipments — but not on physical music.
A Cold War-era carveout known as the Berman Amendment to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act prevents presidents from regulating the flow of “informational materials,” a category that includes physical music, books and artwork.
“If vinyl had gotten tariffed, you could have possibly seen the price of a record going up to $40 and $50,” Berklee College of Music professor Ralph Jaccodine told CNBC. “So, this is welcome news for people buying physical music.”
The exemption, which is protecting one of the fastest-growing segments of the music industry, is also welcome on Wall Street.
Vinyl sales have roared back in the past decade, particularly during the pandemic, driven by younger buyers and an appetite for nostalgia. The PVC discs now account for nearly three-quarters of all U.S. physical music revenue — a nearly 20% jump since 2020, according to data from the Recording Industry Association of America.
“It is very encouraging and a bit of a relief that physical music formats have been classified as exempt to tariffs,” said Ryan Mitrovich, general manager of the Vinyl Alliance, a nonprofit promoting physical media that works with manufacturers, distributors and music labels. “However, we’re not really taking anything for granted here with the chaotic climate around trade disruptions.”
The sales boom has been lucrative for record labels such as Universal Music Group, or UMG, which works with Swift.
Her last album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” sold 3.49 million physical and digital copies, according to entertainment data company Luminate, driving a 9.6% jump in UMG’s second-quarter revenue in 2024 compared with the same period in 2023. Physical revenue, which includes vinyl, surged by 14.4% during the quarter.
Without a Swift album on shelves so far this year, UMG’s most recent earnings report, in July, showed a 4.5% uptick in revenue year over year, but physical revenue decreased by 12.4%. UMG shares fell 24% after the July earnings release.
Universal Music Group declined to comment.
The downturn could be short-lived. Estimates from Billboard predict that first-week vinyl sales of Swift’s new 12-track album, which debuts Friday, could top 1 million — breaking her own record of 859,000 for “The Tortured Poets Department.”
“Taylor Swift has unique ability to drive the market through her decisions of what and how to release music,” said Jaccodine, who has worked with artists such as Bruce Springsteen. “Swift’s release can and will likely cause a boom in the music business.”
Tariff trade-offs
Not everyone is celebrating the tariff exemptions. Some American record manufacturers say they’re missing out on business.
“We support the tariffs because it helps U.S. manufacturing, and we want to be a part of the wave of making things in the USA,” Alex Cushing, co-founder and president of Dallas-based Hand Drawn Records, told CNBC.
Most vinyl is pressed overseas, industry experts said, with the largest manufacturer, GZ Media, based in the Czech Republic. GZ CEO Michal Štěrba said the company has made top-selling albums for artists such as Lady Gaga, Madonna and U2. On average, the company produces 1 in 4 records from plants around the globe, including ones in Nashville and Memphis, Tennessee, he added.
“Our goal is to keep production as close to the customer as possible, so that a record sold in the U.S. is also made in the U.S.,” Štěrba told CNBC.
If tariffs were imposed, Štěrba said, costs would get passed on to consumers. The Czech Republic is part of the European Union, which faces a 15% blanket tariffs on EU exports to the U.S.
“By keeping tariff costs out of the supply chain — regardless of the product or country — consumers benefit through better pricing,” Štěrba said in a statement. “Ultimately, it’s usually the customer who has to pay a higher price if tariffs are applied.”
Cushing, a board member of the Vinyl Record Manufacturers Association, said he believes there would be more American jobs if tariffs were to apply to vinyl.
“We could put more hard-working Americans to work with good wages,” he said. “Our company makes 2 million records annually with a staff of just 60. If you want to grow manufacturing jobs, this would be a great industry.”
Cushing said U.S. manufacturers like his don’t have the capacity to handle the demand for an album on Swift’s scale. But for smaller-scale artists, he said, tariffs on imports could shift more business stateside.
“Our raw materials are tariffed, but with skyrocketing shipping and material costs globally, regional shipping in the U.S., coupled with having lower inventory, could help lower costs,” Cushing said.
Some American manufacturers preempted extra costs earlier this year.
“Tariffs were definitely forecasted, and the industry was preparing for this for quite a while,” Vinyl Alliance’s Mitrovich said. “We saw a lot of companies defend against this by increasing their stocks of ink, PVC and other things in the months leading up to the tariffs.”
A man browses through vinyl records.
SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images
Artists’ earnings
For many artists, physical sales remain more lucrative than streaming.
On Spotify, earnings usually range between $0.003 and $0.005 per stream based on an artist’s contract with their record label, Jaccodine said. Meanwhile, artists typically enjoy between 10% and 25% of royalties on physical records, according to the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.
“Unless you are just a handful of musicians, you basically are not making enough money from streaming to sustain,” Jaccodine said. “For artists large and small, merchandise like records, CDs, cassettes, hats, hoodies and ticket sales are the bread and butter.”
For comparison, Swift’s Eras Tour, which was the highest-grossing tour of all time, sold over $2 billion worth of tickets for 149 shows over two years, The New York Times reported. Meanwhile, she earned between $200 million and $400 million from streaming platforms over that same period, according to figures from Billboard.
Fans take photos with Taylor Swift’s new album “The Life of a Showgirl” at a Target store in New York City, U.S., Oct. 3, 2025.
Kylie Cooper | Reuters
Gen Z’s buying power
Analysts expect the vinyl market to keep expanding, though not at the explosive pace seen during the pandemic.
“The market for vinyl is strong and is likely to be for the foreseeable future, but there could always be supply troubles,” Jaccodine said.
Gen Z has fueled vinyl’s resurgence, industry experts said. Nearly 60% of 18- to 24-year-olds in a survey by music manufacturer Key Production said they listen to physical music, the highest of any demographic group. The survey was conducted Feb. 27-March 5, 2024, in the U.K., and had 503 respondents.
The vinyl comeback also kicked off an explosion in the number of “variants” released: collectible editions of albums or singles with alternative cover art, colored discs or vinyl-exclusive bonus tracks.
On TikTok, “vinyl hauls” rack up millions of views as fans show off rare variants and collections, sparking demand and motivating fans such as McDaniels to buy.
“It’s sort of like Pokémon where you ‘gotta catch ’em all,'” McDaniels said. “There’s FOMO [fear of missing out] if someone has a variant that you don’t.”
Experts said Gen Z’s interest in vinyl is also a response to digital burnout.
“So many groups are on their screens paying fees to have access to content but do not ever actually own anything, so this gives them physical ownership,” Cushing said. “Vinyl is counter to all the ease of modern music listening and that’s why people want it.”
No artist has capitalized on the trend more than Swift.
“The Tortured Poets Department” was 2024’s top album, accounting for over 6% of total album sales — more than seven times the next-best-selling artist, according to Luminate. Swift released 36 different album variants in the U.S. across digital and physical music.
“The Life of a Showgirl” comes in at least seven different variants of colored vinyl, each with a unique cover. For Swift and UMG, every exclusive edition of a vinyl record, CD or cassette has the potential to generate millions in extra revenue.
“Sales of Swift’s albums act as drivers for the fortunes of almost the entire music industry,” Jaccodine said. “Her fans are waiting with bated breath for the release, but so is the industry.”
For McDaniels and thousands of other superfans, the lingering question is how easy it will be to get the exclusive variants first.
“I know people think it’s crazy,” she said. “As long as a vinyl stays under $75 for a new release, I feel like it is worth it. It’s like an addiction to getting these, but I love collecting them.”
Business
BVG India IPO: Fresh Issue Of Rs 300 Crore, Existing Shareholders To Sell 2.85 Crore Shares

Last Updated:
BVG India Limited files DRHP with SEBI for IPO, offering Rs 300 crore fresh issue and OFS. With 85000 staff and Rs 3301.8 crore revenue.

Upcoming IPO Calendar
BVG India IPO: Pune-headquartered BVG India Limited, the country’s largest integrated facility management (IFM) services provider, has filed its Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) to launch its Initial Public Offering (IPO).
BVG India IPO Composition
The issue comprises a fresh issue of equity shares aggregating up to Rs 300 crore and an offer for sale (OFS) of up to 2.85 crore equity shares by existing shareholders. Out of the fresh issue proceeds, Rs 250 crore has been earmarked for repayment or pre-payment of borrowings, while the balance will be deployed towards general corporate purposes.
About BVG India Company
The company operates through three business verticals—Integrated Facility Management (IFM), Emergency Response Services (ERS), and Environment & Sustainability Services (ESS)—catering to clients across industrial, commercial, healthcare, education, government and transport infrastructure sectors.
Under IFM, BVG India provides soft services such as mechanised housekeeping, janitorial services, industrial housekeeping, manpower supply, security, office support and retail fuel outlet maintenance; hard services including electro-mechanical works, mechanical, electrical and plumbing (MEP) services, repairs and maintenance, road management, city cleaning and infrastructure upkeep; and specialised services like catering, paint-shop cleaning, back-office support, logistics management, and fleet operation, including EV bus management. The company is also a trusted partner to the Indian Railways, managing station facility operations, rolling stock and track maintenance, and on-board housekeeping.
Through ERS, BVG India pioneered police emergency response in India and introduced ambulances equipped with advanced medical devices and staffed with doctors. Notably, BVG India introduced the practice of staffing ambulances with doctors, setting new benchmarks for emergency medical care and reinforcing its leadership in public service delivery. Under ESS, it delivers waste management, horticulture, landscaping, afforestation, lake rejuvenation, and smart city projects, while also producing solar modules and installation and maintenance for solar projects nationwide.
BVG India Financials
As of 31 March 2025, BVG India had a workforce of over 85,000 employees operating across 2,218 active sites nationwide, making it one of the largest employers in the facility management space. For FY25, the company reported revenue from operations of ₹3,301.8 crore, total income of ₹3,319.5 crore, and profit after tax of ₹207.2 crore, translating into a healthy Return on Equity (ROE) of 17.44%. Its robust financial performance and diversified business model highlight its ability to scale operations while maintaining profitability.
The IPO will be managed by ICICI Securities Limited, JM Financial Limited and Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors Limited, with MUFG Intime India Private Limited acting as the registrar.
The global outsourced Facility Management (FM) market, valued at USD 1,030 billion in 2024, has grown at a CAGR of 4.2% from 2019 to 2024, recovering from the pandemic-led disruption and regaining pre-2020 spending levels by late 2021. With rising infrastructure investments, rapid industrialisation, the development of smart buildings and increasing adoption of digital solutions, the market is expected to grow strongly. Government initiatives in emerging economies to contract private operators for clean, green and smart infrastructure further open up opportunities. By 2029, the outsourced FM market is projected to reach USD 1,495.1 billion, growing at a CAGR of 7.7% between 2024 and 2029.
With its leadership position, diverse service portfolio, strong execution track record and commitment to sustainability, BVG India is strategically placed to benefit from these industry tailwinds and strengthen its position as a pioneer in integrated facility management and allied services in India.

Varun Yadav is a Sub Editor at News18 Business Digital. He writes articles on markets, personal finance, technology, and more. He completed his post-graduation diploma in English Journalism from the Indian Inst…Read More
Varun Yadav is a Sub Editor at News18 Business Digital. He writes articles on markets, personal finance, technology, and more. He completed his post-graduation diploma in English Journalism from the Indian Inst… Read More
October 03, 2025, 18:00 IST
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Business
The wealth of the top 1% reaches a record $52 trillion

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.
The top 10% of Americans added $5 trillion to their wealth in the second quarter as the stock market rally continued to benefit the biggest investors, according to new data from the Federal Reserve.
The total wealth of the top 10% — or those with a net worth of more than $2 million — reached a record $113 trillion in the second quarter, up from $108 trillion in the first quarter, according to the Fed. The increase follows three years of continued growth for those at the top, with the top 10% adding over $40 trillion to their wealth since 2020.
All wealth groups saw gains over the past year, with the net worth of the bottom half of Americans increasing 6% over the past 12 months, according to the Fed data. Yet the growth has been fastest for those at the very top. The top 1% have seen their wealth increase by $4 trillion over the past year, an increase of 7%. Their wealth hit a record $52 trillion in the second quarter.
The top 0.1% saw their wealth grow by 10% over the past year. Since the pandemic, the top 0.1%, or those with a net worth of at least $46 million, have seen their total wealth nearly double to over $23 trillion.
Despite the recent faster growth at the top, the total shares of wealth held by the upper echelon has remained fairly stable for decades. The top 1% held 29% of total household wealth in the second quarter, compared with 28% in 2000. The top 10% held 67% of total household wealth in the quarter while the bottom 90% held 33%.
The biggest driver of wealth gains at the top this year has been the stock market. The value of the corporate equities and mutual fund shares held by the top 10% increased from $39 trillion to over $44 trillion over the past year. The top 10% of Americans hold over 87% of corporate equities and mutual fund shares.
The population of the ultra-wealthy is also growing rapidly. The number of ultra-high-net-worth Americans, or those worth $30 million or more, grew 6.5% in the first half of 2025, after surging 21% last year, according to a new report from Altrata. There are now 208,090 ultra-high-net-worth individuals in the U.S., accounting for 41% of the world’s total.
The surging wealth at the top has created an increasingly bifurcated consumer economy, with the wealthy accounting for a growing share of overall spending. Consumers in the top 10% of the income distribution accounted for 49.2% of consumer spending in the second quarter, marking the highest level since data started being compiled in 1989, according to Mark Zandi at Moody’s Analytics.
The so-called “K-shaped economy” has performed well so far, at least according to broad economic measures such as GDP and consumption. Yet the growing dependence on a small sliver of consumers at the top carries risks.
Zandi said a deep and prolonged decline in the stock market, which is driving almost all of the wealth gains at the top, could send wider ripples through the economy.
“The economy is being powered in big part by the spending of the extraordinarily well-to-do, who are cheered by the surging value of their stock portfolios,” he said. “If the richly (over) valued stock market were to stumble, for whatever reason, and the well-to-do see more red on their stock tickers than green, they will quickly turn more cautious in their spending, posing a serious threat to the already fragile economy.”
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